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Judi Lynn

(160,515 posts)
Sat Nov 23, 2013, 06:25 PM Nov 2013

LA Times Op-Ed: Honduras elections: A chance to get it right this time

Honduras elections: A chance to get it right this time

Sunday's voting could bolster democracy and human rights — and the United States has a role to play.

By Alexander Main
November 24, 2013

In June 2009, democracy, human rights and the rule of law were shattered in Honduras. Democratically elected President Manuel Zelaya was flown out of the country at gunpoint, and, in the days and months that followed, pro-democracy demonstrations were violently repressed and critical media outlets shut down. Elections organized a few months later under the coup regime did nothing to remedy the situation. Held in a climate of repression and boycotted by opposition groups, these elections were widely seen as illegitimate by many Hondurans and most governments in the hemisphere — with the notable exception of the United States.



On Nov. 24, new presidential and legislative elections will offer Honduras an opportunity to finally move forward. This time, a score of political parties are participating, including a new party — LIBRE — whose presidential candidate, Xiomara Castro de Zelaya, wife of the deposed president, has had a narrow lead in the polls. But will these elections be truly free, fair and transparent?

The country's dire human rights situation has had a chilling effect on the election campaign and could affect voter turnout. Violence has soared over the last four years, and Honduras now has the highest per-capita homicide rate in the world. Since the 2009 coup there has been a troubling pattern of attacks and intimidation targeting opposition activists, journalists, indigenous community leaders, campesinos and other sectors that take on the powerful, be they the government, landowners or organized crime networks. More recently, opposition candidates and activists and their families have been violently attacked in increasing numbers and even assassinated, according to human rights groups.

Amnesty International recently noted, "A key concern is that the police and army are actually contributing to the violence instead of combating it, something which is exacerbated by an almost total lack of accountability for the abuses they have committed." Rather than reining in the country's out-of-control security forces, the ruling National Party has unleashed military troops in urban areas.

Juan Orlando Hernandez, the National Party's presidential candidate and head of the National Congress, announced the deployment in October of 1,000 "military police" agents, promising to put "soldiers in every neighborhood." These soldiers are supposedly tasked with civilian policing and focused on gang activity. But already they have raided the homes of trade unionists, LIBRE campaigners and others in what many fear could be the start of a new wave of political intimidation.

More:
http://www.latimes.com/opinion/commentary/la-oe-main-honduras-election-20131124,0,5067021.story#ixzz2lVh9HssH

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LA Times Op-Ed: Honduras elections: A chance to get it right this time (Original Post) Judi Lynn Nov 2013 OP
Poverty, coup legacy in play as Honduras picks new president Judi Lynn Nov 2013 #1
Honduras presidential campaign shakes up the status quo Judi Lynn Nov 2013 #2
After Honduras vote, competing presidential candidates claiming victory Judi Lynn Nov 2013 #3

Judi Lynn

(160,515 posts)
1. Poverty, coup legacy in play as Honduras picks new president
Sun Nov 24, 2013, 07:39 AM
Nov 2013

Poverty, coup legacy in play as Honduras picks new president
AFP November 24, 2013, 9:03 pm

Tegucigalpa (AFP) - Some 5.4 million Hondurans cast votes Sunday in a presidential election with a new chance of breaking the century-old dominance of right-wing parties.

Four years after her husband was ousted in a coup, leftist Xiomara Castro, 54, is running neck-and-neck with ruling party candidate Juan Orlando Hernandez, 45.

If she pulls off a win, Castro could also make history by becoming the first woman president of Honduras, one of the poorest nations in Latin America after Haiti, Bolivia and Nicaragua.

"We are going to win this, and get our country back," she said, rallying supporters in jeans and a green shirt hours before polling stations opened.

And shrugging off some critics' suggestions that she might be taking orders from her husband in this male-dominated nation, Castro said Manuel Zelaya would be her top adviser, not the president.

More:
http://nz.news.yahoo.com/a/-/world/19996376/poverty-coup-legacy-in-play-as-honduras-picks-new-president/

Judi Lynn

(160,515 posts)
2. Honduras presidential campaign shakes up the status quo
Sun Nov 24, 2013, 11:59 PM
Nov 2013

Honduras presidential campaign shakes up the status quo
By Tracy Wilkinson
November 23, 2013, 6:00 a.m.

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — A new party is challenging the business and political establishment that has ruled Honduras since civilian government took charge a generation ago.

And its candidate is the wife of a former president deposed by those interests in a 2009 coup, a dramatic throwback to years past. One of her opponents is the military general who overthrew her husband.

Such are politics in Honduras, a longtime U.S. ally that has emerged as the prime symbol of an increasingly violent, dysfunctional Central America and now stands as the main transshipment point for Colombian cocaine headed for the United States.

The presidential election on Sunday comes amid a wave of violence in which candidates, judges and journalists have been slain. The bloodshed, combined with the nation's economic crisis, has propelled more and more Hondurans to flee northward to the United States. Honduran human rights activists have been threatened, especially after testifying in Washington, and the country is badly polarized. U.S. diplomats fear more bloodletting after the vote, which is expected to be close.

More:
http://www.latimes.com/world/la-fg-honduras-election-20131123,0,7839031.story#ixzz2lctv2e1O

Judi Lynn

(160,515 posts)
3. After Honduras vote, competing presidential candidates claiming victory
Mon Nov 25, 2013, 12:05 AM
Nov 2013

After Honduras vote, competing presidential candidates claiming victory
By Nick Miroff, Updated: Sunday, November 24, 8:51 PM

TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — After a day of relatively trouble-free voting in a tight race, Honduras appeared headed for a new political showdown late Sunday, as competing presidential candidates began claiming victory with only a fraction of the ballots counted.

Leftist Xiomara Castro de Zelaya, the wife of deposed former president Manuel “Mel” Zelaya, declared herself the “new president of Honduras” even as preliminary tallies showed her conservative rival, Juan Orlando Hernandez, with an advantage.

The vote count was expected to stretch late into the night, with many here anxious that a close, contested election could toss the troubled country askew once more.

The tense evening followed a day of balloting that international observers said was largely without incident or irregularities. “Everything was calm,” Enrique Correa, the chief of mission from the Organization of American States (OAS), said in an interview. “There were no signs of fraud.”

More:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/voters-in-honduras-election-hope-for-change-without-violence/2013/11/24/c3189e8c-554b-11e3-bdbf-097ab2a3dc2b_story.html?wprss=rss_world


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